Pharmacotherapy of Peptic Ulcer: DR Zareen
Pharmacotherapy of Peptic Ulcer: DR Zareen
Pharmacotherapy of Peptic Ulcer: DR Zareen
of Peptic ulcer
Dr Zareen
Objectives
Regulation of Gastric acid secretion
Classification of drugs used in peptic
ulcer
Mechanism of action, Uses & Adverse
effects, drug interactions of
H2 Blockers
Proton pump inhibitors
Antacids
Ulcer protectives
Drugs for eradication of H.pylori
Why Peptic ulcer occurs
Imbalance primarily between Aggressive
factors and Defensive factors
Regulation of gastric acid
secretion
Classification of drugs
used in peptic ulcer
1. Drugs that inhibit gastric
acid secretion
2. Drugs that neutralize
gastric acid (Antacids)
3. Ulcer protectives
4. Anti H. pylori drugs
Classification
Drugs that inhibit gastric acid
secretion
H2 receptor blockers: Cimetidine,
Ranitidine, Famotidine
Proton pump inhibitors: Omeprazole,
Pantoprazole, esomeprazole
Anticholinergics : Pirenzepine
Prostaglandin analogues: Misoprostol
Classification
Drugs that neutralize gastric acid
(Antacids)
Systemic:
• Sodium bicarbonate, sodium citrate
Non systemic:
• Magnesium hydroxide, Mag. Trisilicate,
Aluminium hydroxide gel, Magaldrate
Classification
Ulcer protectives
Sucralfate
Colloidal Bismuth Sulfate (CBS)
Anti H. pylori drugs
Amoxicillin, Clarithromycin,
Metronidazole, Tinidazole, Tetracycline
H2 ANTAGONISTS
Mechanism of action
Competitively block H2 receptors on
parietal cell & inhibit gastric acid
production
Suppress secretion of acid in all phases
but mainly nocturnal acid secretion
Also reduce acid secretion stimulated by
Ach, gastrin, food, etc.
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption is not interfered by food
Can cross placental barrier and reaches milk,
Poor CNS penetration
The serum half-lives range from 1.1 to 4
hours;
Cleared by a combination of hepatic
metabolism, glomerular filtration, and renal
tubular secretion.
Dose reduction needed in moderate to severe
renal insufficiency
Comparison of H2
antagonists
Cimetidine Ranitidine Famotidine Nizatidine
Bioavailability 80 50 40 >90
Relative Potency 1 5 -10 32 5 -10
Half life (hrs) 1.5 - 2.3 1.6 - 2.4 2.5 - 4 1.1 -1.6
DOA (hrs) 6 8 12 8
Inhibition of 1 0.1 0 0
CYP 450
Dose mg (bd) 400 150 20 150
1. H2 antagonists - Uses
Promote the healing of gastric and duodenal ulcers
Duodenal ulcer – 70 to 90% at 8 weeks
Gastric Ulcer – 50 to 75%
NSAID ulcers induced ulcers
Stress ulcer and gastritis
Zollinger-Ellison syndrome
Prophylaxis of aspiration pneumonia
Adverse effects
Headache, dizziness, bowel upset, dry
mouth
CNS: Confusion, restlessness
Bolus IV – release histamine –
bradycardia, arrhythmia, cardiac arrest
Cimetidine has antiandrogenic actions
Drug interactions
Cimetidine inhibits several CYP-450
isoenzymes and reduces hepatic blood
flow, so inhibits metabolism of many
drugs like theophylline, metronidazole,
phenytoin, imipramine etc.
Antacids reduce the absorption of all H2
blockers
2. Proton Pump Inhibitors
Most effective drugs in antiulcer therapy
Prodrugs requiring activation in acid
environment
Activated forms binds irreversibly to
H+K+ATPase and inhibit it
Omeprazole
Pantoprazole
Lansoprazole
Esomeprazole
Mechanism of Action
Prodrugs inactive at neutral pH
At pH < 5 rearranges to two charged cationic
forms (sulfenamide + sulphenic acid) that bind
covalently with SH groups of H⁺K⁺ ATPase and
inactivate it irreversibly
Pharmacokinetics - PPI
Available as enteric coated tablets
They should be given 30 minutes to 1 hour
before food intake
half life is very short and only 1-2 Hrs
Still the action persists for 24 Hrs to 48 hrs after a
single dose
Action lasts for 3-4days even after stoppage of
the drug
PPI
Therapeutic uses:
1. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
2. Peptic Ulcer - Gastric and duodenal ulcers
3. Bleeding peptic Ulcer
4. Zollinger Ellison Syndrome
5. Prevention of recurrence of nonsteroidal
antiinflammatory drug (NSAID) - associated gastric
ulcers in patients who continue NSAID use.
6. Reducing the risk of duodenal ulcer recurrence
associated with H. pylori infections
7. Aspiration Pneumonia
Adverse Effects
Nausea, loose stools, headache
abdominal pain, constipation,
Muscle & joint pain, dizziness, rashes
Rare
Gynaecomastia, erectile dysfunction
Leucopenia and hepatic dysfunction
Osteoporosis in elderly on prolonged use
Hypergastrinemia
Drug interactions
Omeprazole inhibits the metabolism
of warfarin, phenytoin, diazepam,
and cyclosporine.
However, drug interactions are not a
problem with the other PPIs.
PPI – Dosage schedule
Omeprazole 20 mg o.d.
Lansoprazole 30 mg o.d.
Pantoprazole 40 mg o.d.
Rabeprazole 20 mg o.d.
Esomeprazole 20-40 mg o.d
Proton Pump Inhibitors
Lansoprazole :
Partly reversible, more potent, slightly more
against H pylori, Higher BA, rapid onset.
Pantoprazole:
More acid stable, I.V, CYP450 less affinity
Rabeprazole: claimed to most rapid
Es-omeprazole
Better intragastric pH , higher healing rates.
3. Muscarinic antagonists
Block the M1 class receptors
Reduce acid production, Abolish gastrointestinal
spasm
Pirenzepine and Telenzepine
Reduce meal stimulated HCl secretion by reversible
blockade of muscarinic (M1) receptors on the cell
bodies of the intramural cholinergic ganglia
Unpopular as a first choice because of high
incidence of anticholinergic side effects (dry mouth
and blurred vision)
4. Prostaglandin
analogues- Misoprostol
Inhibit gastric acid secretion
Enhance local production of mucus or
bicarbonate
Help to maintain mucosal blood
Therapeutic use:
Prevention of NSAID-induced mucosal injury
(rarely used because it needs frequent
administration – 4 times daily)
Misoprostol
Doses: 200 mcg 4 times a day
ADRs:
Diarrhoea and abdominal cramps
Uterine bleeding
Abortion
Exacerbation of inflammatory bowel disease and
should be avoided in patients with this disorder
Contraindications:
1. Inflammatory bowel disease
2. Pregnancy (may cause abortion)
5.Antacids
No acid No HP No ulcer
No ulcer
Discovery of
H. pylori & its
role in peptic
ulcer
Omeprazole / Lansoprazole - 20 / 30 mg bd
Clarithromycin - 500 mg bd
Amoxycillin / Metronidazole - 1gm / 500 mg bd